Learning objective this activity responds to

develop an understanding of privacy issues, and how privacy affects women and their lives

Who is this activity for?

This activity can be used with participants with different levels of experience with both online space and creating safe spaces. Of course, if the participants have very basic understanding of feminist concepts such as agency and consent, then the trainer / facilitator will need to clarify those terms at the beginning of the input and discussion.

Time required

Minimum of 40 minutes.

Resources needed for this activity

flip chart paper / white board

markers

The trainer / facilitator can also opt to use a presentation for this activity.

Mechanics

If Un-packing Safe or The Bubble have already been done, use the insights from the those activities to launch into defining privacy. Specifically:

what were the definitions of safety / safe that came from the activities that can be connected to privacy and consent issues

key concepts raised during the prior learning activity that either need to be stressed / reiterated, or further clarified (this is an opportunity to clarify notions / ideas that are against the WRP values on privacy, consent and safety)

experiences shared in the prior activity that highlight the connections between privacy, consent and safety

Key points to be raised in this input and discussion.

Unpacking ¨Consent¨

We tend to think of consent as a one-off thing. Like signing a piece of paper once and then it is set. However, from experience we know that consent is simple yet complex at the same time. Simple in its principle yet complex in its implications. Here are some things to discuss:

Do we violate the privacy of our relatives, friends, colleagues when we talk about them?

Embodied

Which parts of your body do you choose to disclose? When you pick what clothes to wear, and depending on who will see you (gaze as violation of privacy)?

Embodiment online. Self-representation online. From simple things like userpic, to carefully crafted identities, to other kinds of information that reveals things about our bodies (health/medical/sexuality/gender). And how this also translates body as data?

Data Privacy

What data do we willingly cede about ourselves and others?

How about the data about us that is collected, stored and aggregated without our consent?

Defining Privacy

Defining privacy as a fundamental human right, and why it is important for women

How privacy has been defined in policy (could be national, regional and international policy), and what that means for individuals, WHRDs and women

How privacy plays out on the internet: how social media has seemed to redefine privacy both in individual practice and the platform´s use of users´ data

How the internet — and how its being used and developed now — is challenging how we practise privacy.

The relationship between privacy and consent

Discussion Questions

When do we 'forfeit' our right to privacy? For example: Does anonymity facilitate online harassment and GBV?

How critical is the relationship between anonymity and privacy and safety?

In the age of selfies and when people willingly cede information about themselves and others, is privacy dead?

Technically, how would privacy-by-default work on the internet? What kind of changes should platforms like FB need to have privacy-by-default? (We could develop an activity around this in the future.)

Facilitator preparation notes

While this learning activity has the trainer / facilitator doing most of the speaking, it is also important to reiterate the safe, open, and interactive space that all FTX workshops try to create. This can be done by framing this activity with guidelines that allow participants to raise their hands to ask questions or to argue or stress or clarify a point being made in the presentation. The other thing to encourage interactivity during presentation-style learning activities is to ¨popcorn¨ topics — ask a question to the group to start a topic, and then use their answers to launch a presentation / input.

In order to prepare for this learning activity, the trainer / facilitator will need to brush up on the following:

the state of play on privacy issues — policies, trends, recent cases

context-based understanding of privacy: current laws in the location of the workshop or the participants, recent cases relevant to the participants